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• What does the word “belief” mean?
• How might the theory of affective and cognitive belief be used to analyze The Lion King?
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2. Belief
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I believe in Jesus.
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• Note-takers (see announcement on Sept. 11)
• New people?
➡ Welcome!
➡ Make friends, read announcements and syllabus, find out what you missed
➡ Laptops
• RLG101H: introduce you to study of religion
➡ AND to university!4
Announcements
Course ParticipationMarked out of 30:
1. Online discussion comments (6 marks)
2. Tutorial attendance (10 marks)
3. Tutorial reading reflections (10 marks)
4. Tutorial homework (10 marks)
5. PELS workshops (10 marks)
6. Reflections on UTM events (TBD)
➡ 1 mark per event/reflection5 6
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Malory Nye
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Reading Nye
• What to “get” from Nye?
• Key ideas (big picture)
➡ Questions at end of each chapter
• Understand some theories
➡ Be able to apply them to data
➡ Importance of theorists’ names
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Reading Nye
• Read before tutorial and after lecture
➡ Your understanding first, THEN ours
➡ Will help you learn to read difficult material
• Lectures not identical to readings
➡ Too much material in text to cover
➡ Humanities: conversations with texts
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• Visit religious site with one or two other students from your tutorial
➡ Must be site no one is familiar with
➡ No one in group can belong to that religion
➡ Contract is on Quercus
➡ Sign up for groups on Quercus (People)
➡ Due October 4 (worth 2%)11
Field Research Contract Anonymous Feedback
• Nice note
➡ Thanks!
• PDA
➡ Please stop
➡ Thanks!
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Today1. Meaning of “belief”?
2. Film analysis assignments
3. Theories of belief (+ Lion King!)
4. Next week:
➡ Finish “Belief”
➡ Writing / Film Analysis assignment
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1. Meaning of “Belief”
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I believe in Jesus.
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“Belief”
• “I believe in justice.”
• “I believe in Jesus.”
• “I believe you have my stapler.”
• “I believe in Big Foot.”
• “I believe in taking walks in the forest.”
• “I believe in the literal meaning of the Bible.”
“I am the gate for the sheep.”
– Jesus (in John 10:7)
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Song
• “Don’t Stop Believin’” by Journey (1981)Just a small town girl
Livin’ in a lonely worldShe took the midnight train
Goin’ anywhere
Just a city boyBorn and raised in South Detroit
He took the midnight trainGoin’ anywhere
“Don’t Stop Believin’”
Strangers waitingUp and down the boulevard
Their shadows searchingIn the night
Don’t stop believin’Hold on to that feeling
Streetlight peopleDon’t stop believin’
Hold on
“Don’t Stop Believin’”
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“Belief”
• “Belief” in English has different meanings
➡ Think something is true / real
➡ Know something is true / real
➡ Regard something as meaningful or important
➡ Trust in someone / yourself / god(s)
➡ Hope for a good outcome
2. Film Analysis
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• Film lists on course website
• Each TA has different film list!
➡ Must choose list from your TA
➡ Pick (and watch) your film by next week
• Paragraph due September 29➡ RGASC drop-in times next Tuesday
➡ TA office hours next Thursday
Film Paragraph
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• Due October 20
• 4 paragraphs in total:
1. Belief
2. Ritual
3. Text
4. Reflection
Film Analysis
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• Theory:
➡ An idea intended to understand data
➡ Nye’s text: facts + theories
➡ Not all theories helpful for interpreting films
➡ Will provide you with lists of theories from each chapter to choose from
➡ Question: what meaning do you see in the film when you look at it using a theory?
Film Analysis
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• Instructions on Quercus (Assignments)
• Write a paragraph analyzing a film from your TA’s list using one theory of belief➡ Include citations and bibliography
(using CMS author-date style)
➡ Will post document on Quercus with advice and example paragraph
➡ Will post grading rubric on Quercus
Film Paragraph
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Tutorials
• Homework for this week:
➡ Write a paragraph analyzing a film from your TA’s list using one of the approved theories of belief (listed in instructions)
➡ Identify a meaning in the film
➡ Include citations and bibliography
➡ (No grading rubric)
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➡ Bring two copies
3. Theories of Belief
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Theories of Belief
• Cognitive vs. affective beliefs (p. 117)
• Habitus (p. 125-6)
• Reductionist theories (p. 108-9)
• Non-reductionist theories (p. 111-5)
• Belief and common sense (p. 119-123)
• Cognitive approaches (p. 109-11)
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Theories of Belief
• Cognitive vs. affective beliefs (p. 117)
• Habitus (p. 125-6)
• Reductionist theories (p. 108-9)
• Non-reductionist theories (p. 111-5)
• Belief and common sense (p. 119-123)
• Cognitive approaches (p. 109-11)
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Cognitive vs. Affective
• Richard Gombrich
➡ Cognitive: what we say/think we believe
➡ Affective: what our actions indicate we believe
➡ What is the cognitive belief of Timon and Pumbaa (and Simba)?
➡ What is the affective belief of Timon and Pumbaa (and Simba)?
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“hakuna matata!”
no worries, no responsibilities
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“we’re with you to the end”52
“we’re with you to the end”
Cognitive vs. Affective
• Analysis of Lion King:
➡ Timon, Pumbaa, and Simba say that they believe in “Hakuna Matata” (cognitive)
➡ Initially their actions also shows they believe in “Hakuna Matata” (affective)
➡ However when loved ones are in trouble their actions show that they DO believe they have responsibilities (affective)
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Cognitive vs. Affective
• Possible meaning:
➡ Having “no worries” can help us deal with bad experiences
➡ However in some situations we have responsibilities that we really should care about
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Habitus
• Pierre Bourdieu and Catherine Bell
• Cultural context of people’s lives
1. Impact on our beliefs
➡ Note: we still have individual choice (agency)
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Habitus
• Pierre Bourdieu and Catherine Bell
• Cultural context of people’s lives
2. How specific beliefs are viewed/practiced
➡ E.g., belief in “sanctity of life” (Nye 125)
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Habitus
• Analysis of Lion King:
➡ Impact of cultural context on Simba’s beliefs?
➡ Simba is exposed to two cultures that teach two different belief systems
➡ Responsibility (“circle of life”) vs no responsibility (“hakuna matata”)
➡ What might this mean?57
Reductionist
• Religion is “really” about something else(of THIS world)
• “humans make up images of god for human purposes”
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• Reductionist theories: objects of religious beliefs are constructed by people
➡ “Reduce” god(s) to products of human beings
Reductionist
• Usually a critique of religion
➡ Beliefs are false/meaningless
• Other (more positive) perspectives that still take a reductionist approach
➡ Religious beliefs teach us values, provide our lives with meaning, etc.
➡ Afterlife stories (last week’s reading)
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